Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in an impassioned address on Wednesday night that Russian President Vladimir Putin had ordered an invasion of his country but that if Russia attacks, “you will see our faces, not our backs.”
The latest: Ukrainian airspace has been “restricted due to potential hazard for civil aviation,” according to a notice to airmen issued shortly after 4 a.m. Kyiv time.
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Driving the news: Ukraine entered a state of emergency on Wednesday as the Pentagon warned that Russia’s preparations for invasion appear to be complete, and Ukrainian citizens prepared for war.
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The Kremlin has closed a portion of the border to civilian aircraft and published a request from separatist fighters in eastern Ukraine asking for Russian troops to “help beat back” the Ukrainian armed forces.
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Those forces have faced days of shelling in the east but have reportedly resisted any response that could be painted by Moscow as a provocation.
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That has not stopped Russian state TV from running images of supposed Ukrainian attacks, some of them rather ham-fisted, and banging the drum for war. Ukraine’s foreign minister warned of a potential “staged provocation” at a chemical plant.
What he’s saying: In what may be the final hours before a broader invasion begins, Zelensky revealed that he had tried to call Putin but been met with “silence.” He addressed the Russian people in Russian to make an appeal for peace, while acknowledging the need to prepare for war.
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After Putin’s invasion order, the smallest spark could start a “big war” and “burn everything down,” he said, adding: “You are told that this flame will liberate the people of Ukraine, but the Ukrainian people are free.”
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Zelensky said the Russian people have been told he and his citizens are Nazis, despite the fact that his grandfather fought the Nazis in the Soviet infantry.
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He said Russians have falsely been told both that Ukrainians hate Russian culture and have no culture of their own. “We are different, but that is not a reason to be enemies,” he said.
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He said Ukraine had never been and never will be a threat to Russia, and while Russia would never allow his speech to be shown on Russian television, “the people of Russia need to see it.”
Between the lines: Zelensky’s speech was a clear rebuttal to Putin’s combative and historically revisionist hour-long address on Monday, in which he effectively asserted Russia’s right to bend Ukraine to its will and erase its independence.
Go deeper: The latest on the Russia-Ukraine crisis
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